The families of two Trinidadian men who were killed in a US boat strike are suing the US government for "manifestly unlawful" killings. Chad Joseph, 26, and Rishi Samaroo, 41, were among six civilians killed in the October 14 attack on a boat in the Caribbean Sea.
According to the lawsuit filed in US federal admiralty court, the men's deaths were "homicides" committed without due process. The suit alleges that the US government was aware of its own laws prohibiting extrajudicial killings, yet chose to target civilians anyway.
The lawsuit is being brought under the Death on the High Seas Act and the Alien Tort Statute, which gives federal courts jurisdiction over violations of international law. The plaintiffs are seeking damages for wrongful death and extrajudicial killing.
Experts say that the US military's campaign of attacks in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean is "unprecedented and manifestly unlawful". The strikes have killed at least 126 civilians, with many more reported injured or missing.
The US government insists that the attacks are permitted under international law, claiming that they are part of a non-international armed conflict with designated terrorist organizations. However, experts say this claim is flawed, as there is no actual armed conflict that could justify the lethal attacks on boats.
The Intercept has been reporting on these incidents and exposed the US government's secret list of Designated Terrorist Organizations (DTOs), which includes many civilian organizations. The Trump administration's claims to have legal cover for these killings are "patently false", according to experts.
The lawsuit is a significant development in the ongoing struggle over free speech, press freedom, and human rights in the United States. As one lawyer put it, "These were both homicides... Both men were killed without any due process."
According to the lawsuit filed in US federal admiralty court, the men's deaths were "homicides" committed without due process. The suit alleges that the US government was aware of its own laws prohibiting extrajudicial killings, yet chose to target civilians anyway.
The lawsuit is being brought under the Death on the High Seas Act and the Alien Tort Statute, which gives federal courts jurisdiction over violations of international law. The plaintiffs are seeking damages for wrongful death and extrajudicial killing.
Experts say that the US military's campaign of attacks in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean is "unprecedented and manifestly unlawful". The strikes have killed at least 126 civilians, with many more reported injured or missing.
The US government insists that the attacks are permitted under international law, claiming that they are part of a non-international armed conflict with designated terrorist organizations. However, experts say this claim is flawed, as there is no actual armed conflict that could justify the lethal attacks on boats.
The Intercept has been reporting on these incidents and exposed the US government's secret list of Designated Terrorist Organizations (DTOs), which includes many civilian organizations. The Trump administration's claims to have legal cover for these killings are "patently false", according to experts.
The lawsuit is a significant development in the ongoing struggle over free speech, press freedom, and human rights in the United States. As one lawyer put it, "These were both homicides... Both men were killed without any due process."